If you're a gamer who grew up in the 1980s (like me), odds are you helped Link rescue Princess Zelda or Mario defeat King Bowser on a Nintendo Entertainment System (NES). Thirty-plus years later, Nintendo is helping those gamers relive their old-school victories with the NES Classic Edition ($82 at Walmart).
Adding More PSX Games in the Future. Adding more games in the future is easy. Run hakchi.exe. Hit Add more games and add your ROMs. Configure your game. Hit Synchronize selected games with NES/SNES Mini. When prompted, connect your NES Classic Mini and turn it on.
Released in November 2016, the NES Classic Edition is a pint-size version of the original system. It comes with a single two-button controller and 30 preloaded games, including old favorites like Super Mario Bros., The Legend of Zelda, Donkey Kong, Metroid and Ghosts'n Goblins. The original NES Classic Edition was discontinued in April 2017. Nintendo has said that that console will return to stores on June 29, 2018.
How did Nintendo pack so much 8-bit fun into a single box? To find out, I broke out my tools.
Note: This story originally ran in the Fall 2017 issue of CNET Magazine. We're publishing the story online to coincide with our Cracking Open video of the NES Classic and the original NES.
Cracking open the NES Classic Edition
- One of the great little benefits about the recently launched Nintendo Switch Online service is the library of classic NES titles that are free to access with your subscription. As if access to these classic Nintendo titles isn't cool enough, you can also play any of the two-player games online with a friend.
- Play Classic Games online directly in your browser. Download NES ROMs to PC, ANDROID.
I started with the four rubber pads, or feet, on the console's bottom. Using a thin Phillips screwdriver, I removed the pads and the tiny screw hidden underneath each one. I then lifted off the upper half of the system's plastic case to reveal the tech inside.
Though it's less than a quarter the size of the original NES, the Classic Edition's interior is far less cramped. Gone are the front-loading, VCR-esque cartridge tray, the 72-pin cartridge connector that failed so often and the bulky video, audio and power circuitry. All that 1980s tech has been condensed down to a single main circuit board that's about the size of a drink coaster.
After disconnecting the cables for the two game controller ports and a thin cable for the power and reset buttons, I removed a few more screws, lifted off the metal shield that covers the main circuit board and took out the board itself.
Next, I removed the two controller ports, each held in place with a small bracket and single screw. To finish, I only had to disconnect a black, plastic housing that contains a small circuit board to which the contacts for the power and reset buttons are mounted along with the front LED. My teardown of the console was complete.
Turning my attention to the game controller, I removed six screws from the bottom of its clamshell case and then separated the two halves. Inside is a single rectangular circuit board.
The entire cracking-open process took less than 15 minutes and was the simplest teardown I've ever done.
What the teardown tells us
Simple to crack open: The only tool you really need to disassemble the NES Classic Edition is a small Phillips screwdriver (#00 or #000 should work). There's no glue inside the console or the controller, all the internal components are easily accessible and the screws are all the same diameter and length.
More tech packed into a smaller package: The Classic Edition has a quad-core ARM processor, 256MB of RAM and 512MB of storage. For comparison, the original NES had an 8-bit processor, 2KB of work RAM, 2KB of video RAM and no game storage.
NES emulator on a single-board computer: The Classic Edition is basically a Nintendo-sanctioned NES emulator running on a Linux single-board computer. Yes, Linux. And if you're wondering whether it's possible to hack the Classic Edition and load more games? That answer is also yes. There's plenty of information on the internet that will show you how to update the system's software and install additional games. But be warned: There's always a chance that modifying your system could cause irreparable damage. More importantly, downloading and using games for which you don't already own a license for is usually illegal.
Yesterday's games running on today's tech
The NES Classic Edition is pure retro gaming fun. It's a much easier way to play old NES games than hunting through flea markets or online auctions for original hardware. And, it's less complicated (and more legal) than running emulator software with downloaded games on a PC.
Unfortunately, after selling over 2 million Classic Editions, Nintendo unexpectedly discontinued the console in April 2017. If you didn't manage to scoop one up then, you may still be able to buy one online, albeit at a likely inflated price. It's also being released again on June 29. We shelled out $200 for the one I cracked open, which is way more than the $60, £50 or AU$100 retail price.
Perhaps what stood out the most to me after cracking open the NES Classic Edition was just how much technology has improved in the past three decades. The hardware inside the Classic Edition is tiny compared with the original system, yet it's so much more powerful. I can't wait to see how far technology advances in the next 30 years.
CNET Magazine: Check out a sampling of the stories you'll find in CNET's newsstand edition.
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Update, May 29 at 5:55 p.m. PT: Added information about the NES Classic Edition returning to stores in June 2018.
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If you’re looking to relive the classic titles of yesterday on the console you have today, the Nintendo Wii makes a perfect platform for emulating older Nintendo Entertainment System and Super Nintendo Entertainment System titles—read on as we show you how.
We love retro games and we love squeezing extra value out of the hardware we already have—see, for example, our guide to setting up your Wii to play awesome 1980s and 90s retro point-and-click adventure games. In that vein, we were thrilled to discover how easy it was to set up our Wii to play our favorite old Nintendo titles. Follow along and within the hour you’ll be plunked down in front of your Wii playing your favorite titles, too.
What You’ll Need
For this tutorial you will need the following items; read over the list below and then check out the notes following for additional details.
How To Download Game On Nes Classic Games
- One modded Nintendo Wii unit capable of running homebrew software.
- One Wiimote and/or GameCube controller.
- One copy of FCE Ultra GX for NES emulation.
- One copy of SNES9x GX for SNES emulation.
- At least one game ROM for each emulator you’re installing.
First, this project requires a soft-modded Wii unit that can run homebrew software. While we have shown you how to hack your Wii for homebrew before, new editions of the Wii operating system software require different techniques for soft-modding. Therefore, we strongly suggest you read over The Complete Softmod Guide to ensure you are performing the correct mod technique for your particular Wii. Make sure to install the Homebrew Browser while you’re at it. This tutorial will not walk you through the soft mod process.
Second, the regular Wiimote works awesome for NES emulation (as, held sideways, it is essentially a thick NES controller). For SNES games, however, the Wiimote is a poor fit as you need to do some pretty fancy fingering to use the SNES X and Y buttons.
For SNES emulation we strongly recommend either using the Wii Classic controller (offers a perfect 1:1 fit for the SNES’s A, B, X, Y configuration) or a GameCube controller (the right-hand button layout is slightly different than the SNES controller but it’s close enough that you should have no problems using it).
Finally, you need game ROMs to make this work—without them you’ll have an awesome emulator setup with no games to actually load in the emulator. We’ll go over where you can dig up ROMs in the first section.
Locating Game ROMs
If you’re a long time retro game fan there’s a good chance you already have a pile of ROMs sitting around waiting to be loaded into the newest emulator to come across your work bench. If not, don’t worry—it’s nearly impossible to even search for “emulator ROMs” without practically falling into a giant pile of them.
The following sites maintain extensive catalogs of retro gaming ROMs for everything from the Atari to the Playstation. Grab a few ROMs to test your system before proceeding:
EmuParadise:
CoolROM:
DopeROMs:
Armed with a few ROMs to make testing easier, it’s time to setup and configure the emulators. Let’s start with setting up NES emulation.
There are good 5.1 MP4 files out their. I don't use the mp4 container, so I don't know how well it works with multichan dts, but I know it recently gained support for multichan ac3, so you should consider going after those if you find them. AC3 @ 640kbps is transparent to DTS @ 1510 kbps • • • • •. Reputable encoding groups use a standard of 5.1 ac3 or 5.1 DTS audio for hd encodes. If I grab a movie I try find ones that mention '5.1' '6 channels' or 'DTS' in the description, I load them into my 3TB drive going into a WD Live Media Player HDMI'd into a Denon X2000 Receiver.
Installing and Configuring Your NES Emulator
The first order of business is to grab the NES emulator and start copying files to your Wii’s SD card—the place where all your homebrew software and ROMs will end up.
Installing the Emulator: First, eject the SD card from your Wii and hook it up to an SD card reader attached to the computer you’re working on. Next, download a copy of FCE Ultra GX—a port of the really polished FCEUX NES emulator to the Wii.
For this tutorial we’ll be using the most current version FCE Ultra GX 3.3.4.zip. (While you’re grabbing files you may also wish to grab a copy of the Cheats file and the Channel Installer file for use later in the tutorial.)
Inside the .ZIP you’ll find the following folders:
/apps/
/fceugx/
Go ahead and simply extract the entire archive to the root of your SD card—it will place all the files where they belong. Once the archive is extracted, you’ll see the /fceugx/ folder in the root of the SD card, open it up and navigate /fceugx/roms/. This is the folder where FCE Ultra GX will look for your games; take a moment now to load it up with your test ROMs. Make sure you’re copying your NES ROMs (.NES files), not your SNES ROMs (.SMC files).
Launching and Learning the Emulator: After loading up the emulator software and the ROM files, it’s time to take it for a test drive. Safely eject your SD card from your computer and insert it into your Wii.
Navigate to the Homebrew Channel and look for the FCE Ultra GX entry:
Launch the app; it will immediately dump you into the ROM selection screen which displays all the ROMs you put in the /fceugx/roms/ directory.
In the settings menu you can tweak various aspects of how FCE Ultra GX works (both the menu system and the way the emulator interacts with games). Here are the relevant sub-menus:
- Saving & Loading: You can change the default folders for ROMs, saved games, and cheat files here.
- Menu: Here you can tweak how the FCE Ultra GX menu looks and functions (turn the background music off, change the orientation of the Wiimote from vertical to horizontal, etc.).
- Network: FCE Ultra GX supports loading ROMs from network shares. If you wanted access to a very large ROM collection without having to store them all permanently on the Wii SD card, this might be worth configuring.
- Game Genie: This allows you to use the Game Genie ROM (available at the ROM sites listed above) to load old-school Game Genie codes into the game.
A note on the last entry, the Game Genie—other than setting this up for the sake of nostalgia there is little reason to use the Game Genie to enable cheats in NES game ROMs because you can easily use cheat files with the emulator (more on this later).
Once you’ve checked out the menus and made any tweaks you’d like to make, it’s time to test out our first game. Go ahead and select one from your list. We’re taking Super Mario Bros. 2 for a test drive:
Weird wavy hills, fat mustachioed protagonist, magical door to another realm? Looks exactly how we remember it and sounds good too—sound effects and soundtracks are often the most difficult part of emulating old games, so we’re excited to hear our old games without any strange audio artififacts.
Now at this point you could simply play the game without any problems, but there are a host of settings and cool features hidden away in FCE Ultra GX it would be a shame to not take advantage of. At any time during play you can press the Home key on the Wiimote (or press Left on the GameCube controller’s right analog control stick) to access the emulator’s in-game menu like so:
The in-game menu is downright magical, here you can perform all sorts of handy tricks that playing-the-NES-in-1988-You only wishes they had been able to do.
- Save: Here you can save your game at any time. Whether or not the game you’re playing actually supports game saving or not is irrelevant, FCE Ultra GX will take a snapshot of the game at the exact moment you paused it. This is a fantastic feature to take advantage of when faced with really difficult portions of games.
- Load: Loads the previous saved states you have created.
- Game Settings: Here you can change button mapping, adjust the video output, change controllers (this tells the emulator if you want to mimic using 2 NES controller, 4 NES controllers, or the NES Zapper gun), and allows you to toggle cheats on and off.
- Reset: Functions like the reset button on the original NES console.
- Main Menu: Returns you to the original game ROM selection menu.
Cheat Codes: At this point we’ve mentioned the Cheat codes section in multiple sub-sections of the tutorial and you’re probably more than a little bit curious about it—who wouldn’t like to cheat their way through some of the more difficult passages in Super Mario Bros. 2, for example.
In order to take advantage of cheats you need appropriately packaged .CHT files that correspond to the game in which you wish to enable cheats. The creator of FCE Ultra GX has already done the leg work of packaging up hundreds of cheat files for us, so that’s a good place to start. Grab a copy of his collected cheats in the download directory here.
To use the cheat files you need to do two important things: First, they need to be extracted to your Wii SD card /fceugx/cheats/. Second, the name of the .CHT file must match, exactly, the filename of the .NES file in the /roms/ directory. Whether you change the name of the .CHT file to match the .NES file or vice-versa, it must be exactly the same. We’re going to edit our ROM titles to match the .CHT titles since the .CHT titles are much cleaner. Take a moment to extract the cheat files now and clean up any file names if necessary.
Start up one of the games you have a cheat code set for and, once in the game, press the in-game emulation menu (the Home button on the Wiimote). Select Game Settings, then Cheats, and you’ll be greeted with a laundry list of cheat codes like the following:
In our test game Super Mario Bros. 2 there are cheat codes for just about everything: infinite health, infinite lives, and even fun in-game tweaks like allowing all characters (not just Princess Peach) to float about when they jump.
A word on cheat codes: they’re super fun to play with but they can be really finicky—you’ll find that many cheat codes have one or more alternates and that often times enabling multiple cheat codes will sometimes lead to codes canceling each other out. That said it’s a lot of fun to mess around with them.
Channel Installation: Now that you’ve installed the emulator, installed your games, and acquired some cheat codes to mess around with, there’s only one last tweak you can squeeze in. If you want to faster access to your emulator, you can install a channel for it—one of the shortcuts found on the Wii’s main system menu as seen above.
To do so, visit the FCE Ultra GX download page and grab a copy of the Channel Installer. Extract the contents of the .ZIP file to the root of your SD card. Run the Homebrew Channel and then launch the FCE Ultra GX Channel Installer. A new channel with the FCE Ultra complete with a spiffy launch animation will be added to your Wii’s main interface.
Installing and Configuring Your SNES Emulator
For this portion of the tutorial you’re going to, again, require your Wii’s SD card. We know it’s hard to put down the NES emulator from the last section of the tutorial, but peel yourself away from all that retro gaming goodness in order to install more retro gaming goodness.
Installing the Emulator: First, let’s grab a copy of the actual emulator from the Snes9xGX download directory here. We’ll be using the most current release, Snes9x GX 4.3.2 for this tutorial. While you’re in the download directory, we would also recommend grabbing a copy of the Cheat Files archive and the Channel Installer (if you would like to follow along with the cheats and Wii menu shortcut portion of the tutorial later on).
Inside the .ZIP you’ll find the following folders:
/apps/
/snes9xgx/
Go ahead and extract the archive right to the root of your Wii’s SD card. After the extraction is finished, go ahead and check out the /snes9xgx/ folder on the root of the SD card. Here you’ll find the same folder structure as you did in the NES emulator: one folder for cheats, ROMs, and saves.
Select your test ROMs and place them into the /roms/ directory now.
Launching and Learning the Emulator: Now that you have your emulator installed and ROM files dumped to the SD card, it’s time to eject the SD card so we can try everything out.
Navigate to the Homebrew Menu again and look forSnes9x GX. Click on the shortcut to launch the application.
At this point, you might be thinking “Hmm, that looks suspiciously like a blue version of the red FCE Ultra GX menu we were just messing around with…” That would not be an unfounded suspicion. Not only is the Wii port of Snex9x managed by the same guy that managed the Wii port of FCE Ultra GX but both are laid out using the same icon/GUI library and designed to have nearly identical menu layouts for ease of use.
That said, we’re still going to go through all the major menus both for the benefit of those only using the SNES emulator in this tutorial and to highlight the relevant SNES-only features.
Here are the relevant sub-menus:
- Saving & Loading: You can change the default folders for ROMs, saved games, and cheat files here.
- Menu: Here you can tweak how the Snes9x GX menu looks and functions (turn the background music off, change the orientation of the Wiimote from vertical to horizontal, etc.).
- Network: Snes9x GX also supports loading ROMs from network shares.
You will notice that unlike the main settings menu for the FCE Ultra GX, there is no Game Genie entry in the settings menu for the Snes9x GX. You can still use cheat codes, more on that later, but there is no SNES Game Genie implementation.
Once you have checked out the menus and made any tweaks you would like to make, it’s time to test out our first game. Go ahead and select one from your list. We’re taking The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past out for a spin:
Our Uncle Alfon ran off to heed the call of a maiden in distress, it’s storming, and the guards of Hyrule can’t figure out what a little kid is doing out of bed at this hour wandering around—it’s just as awesome as we remember it. Just like our NES test of Super Mario Bros. 2 this test has perfect sound. We’ve been disappointed by various SNES emulators over the years when it comes to quality sound playback so we’re pleased to see this one handles it so well.
Now, just like in the previous tutorial you could just dig right into the game but there are a pile of neat features in the emulator’s in-game menu.
At any time during play you can press the Home key on the Wiimote (or press Left on the GameCube controller’s right analog control stick) to access the emulator’s in-game menu like so:
Much like in FCE Ultra GX we can do all sorts of neat things, including:
- Save: Save your game at any time using the snapshot feature—doesn’t matter if the game supports saving or not you can always create a save point using this menu. We can’t tell you how many times we’ve used the snapshot feature on particularly difficult dungeons in A Link to the Past.
- Load: Loads the previous saved states you have created.
- Game Settings: Here you can change button mapping, adjust the video output, and change controllers. Unlike the relatively simple controller selections available for the NES, the SNES emulator includes settings for 2 and 4 SNES controllers, the SNES mouse (used for games like Mario Paint) and the SuperScope and Justifier (two different light guns available for the SNES).
- Reset: Functions like the reset button on the original SNES console.
- Main Menu: Returns you to the original game ROM selection menu.
Cheat Codes: After reading over the NES section of the tutorial you’re familiar with the concept of emulation cheat codes. The cheat codes are implemented in Snes9x GX.
You’ll need the cheat code pack from the Snes9x GX download page, so if you haven’t grabbed it already so so now. Extract it to the root of your SD card so that all the .CHT codes end up in the /snes9xgx/cheats/ folder. Again, like with the NES emulator, you need to ensure that the .CHT file names are a perfect match to the .SMC SNES roms—whether you match the cheat to the game or vice-verse is irrelevant, they just have to match.
Once you have the cheat codes copied and the file names match up, accessing them is as simple as opening the in-game menu (via the Home key), navigating to Game Settings and selecting Cheats:
Infinite rupees and infinite bombs? We’ll take ten. Jest aside, we’ll offer the same caution we offered with the cheat code system for the NES emulator—enable too many cheat codes and all sorts of weird things can happen, if you’re having trouble using the cheat system try starting off with your must have cheats and adding them in one-by-one.
Channel Installation: It can be a hassle to hop into the Homebrew menu every time you want to launch your emulators (and if you have little kids using the system you may not even want them in the Homebrew menu). This is where installing the custom channel for your SNES emulator is handy.
If you haven’t already grabbed it, hit up the downloads page and grab the Channel Installer. Extract the contents of the archive to the root of your SD card and then run the installer once from the Homebrew menu. You’ll be rewarded with a sweet custom channel that, just like the NES channel, sports custom graphics and a slick startup animation.
That’s all there is to it—install the emulators, dump over some ROMs and cheat codes, do a little minor channel installation to give yourself super-fast access to your favorite games, and you’re in business.
The next time friends are over and you suggest firing up the Wii you can steam roll their protests over yet another round of MarioKart Wii by interjecting “Uhh, no. We’re playing The Secret of Mana… with multiplayer support.” Maybe you’ll be able to successfully parlay their shock at being able to relive such an awesome title into them not noticing you grabbed the first player controller.
Game
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